Newspaper Page Text
Tin: EASTMAN TIMES.
R, g. BURTON, - - Editor
THURSDAY MARCH 5, 1874.
and. ... LU. f
MACON VS. SAVANNAH.
Straws Show Which Way the Wind
Blows.
We have no apology to tai&ke for
'again calling the attention of the rea
ders of the Times to a fact which we
avo repeatedly laid before them in the
past, viz : That in their intercourse
with the commercial world, the parties
who liberally advertise their business
''in our columns, are entitled to the first
e .m idcration at their hands, provided
they sell goods on as favorable terms
as others, it is, at least, a duty which
Vo/r friends owe to those who patron
ize as to give them a trial, and at least
eomoare their hills with those who en
deavor to compete against them with
out the use of printer’s ink. There is
various reasonsjwhy it is to the inter
est of our readers of all classes to pa
tronize those who patronize us. To
■the interest of the merchant, because
we live here, and wo and our employ
es spend the few stray dimes we accu
mulate in this business hole in their
midst. To the interest of our country
and fanner friends, because it makes
our paper valuable as an advertising
medium and thus secures us a patron
age which enables us to give them a
better paper for their money, and we
•only ask those who profess to he our
friends to look into these things and
see if our reasons are not correct. A
case in point will illustrate our mean
ing. A few days since, we ordeicd
from the house of 11. 1\ Bickford, of
Savannah, a hill of sash for a friend
of ours, amounting to something over
four dollars. They were promptly
forwarded with hill, which we render
ed to our friend, who upon comparing
it with the hills of a Macon house who
does not advertise with us, found it
Was about eight per cent, cheaper than
the Macon house would furnish the
same goods. Mr. Bickford’s advertise
ment appears conspicuously in our
columns, and our friends may rest as
sured that when a man possesses a
sufficiently liberal spirit to advertise
his goods lie means business, has
something to sell, and possesses suffi
cient liberality of soul to sell it on
reasonable terms. “A word to the
wise is , uTc nt, while a fool is not
converted by a bushel of talk.”
Black Against W hite in South
Carolina.
The Herald’s Washington coi'res-,
pondent, under date of Monday,
writes ihat the South Carolina ne
groes have combined to make Con
gressman Elliott their candidate for
Governor. The white citizens, with
out regard to party, ask Senator
Robertson to secure the support of
the Administration on their side, to
accept the gubernatorial nomination.
It is said that Congressman Elliott
boasts that if he can get control of
the State he will turn the cradle of
the slaveholders, rebellion into the
asylum of the slaves,’ thereby making
the State uninhabitable for whites
and the clysium for the negro. The
contest promises to be exceedingly
bitter, and some are predicting an
other irrepressible conflict—this time
of races.
Progress of the Praying .Bands.
The women of Xenia, Ohio, rejoice
over the surrender of the most obdu
rate liquor seller in town, one Phillips,
proprietor of a saloon called ‘The
Shades of Death/ who swore he would
never succumb to the power of prayer.
On Thursday ne dragged his rum
barrels and kegs to the street, and
spilled their contents upon the
ground, amid the songs and hallelu
jahs of the enthusiastic women. Other
saloons in the same vicinity which
the women are trying to close are
‘Hell's Half Acre/ ‘Certain Death/
Devil’s Den/ A notable feature of
the war in Xenia, the last two or
three days, has been the presence of
a large school of girls, led by their
teachers singing before the saloons
such, songs as ‘Say Mr. Barkeeper,
has father been here?' and father dear
father came home/ It is seriously
proposed to close all the schools and
business for a portion of each day,
that the whole population may be
brought to bear on the saloons, and
the sanguine believe that not a month
will pass before every saloon in Xenia
will be closed. Upon hearing of the
surrender of the ‘Shades of Death’
man, the State Convention of Grangers
600 strong, rose and gave three
cheers, while all the church bells
were set ringing and there was
universal rejoicing.
The mother of an unmanaged Irish
boy, living in Portland, thus excuses
him to the police : “Sure, Patsy, isn’t
a bad by at all, but he is troubled witl
a rooth of mind to the brain.”
Lit Iters.
Never burn kindly written letters )
it is so pleasant to read them over
when the ink is brown, the paper yel
low with age, and the hands that
traced the friendly words arc folded
over the hearts that prompted them,
under the green sod. Above all never
burn love letters. To read them in
after years is like a resurrection to
one’s youth. The elderly spinster finds
in the impassioned oiler she foolishly
rejected twenty years ago a rejuvenes
cence. Glancing over it she realizes
that she was once a belle and a beau
ty and beholds her former self in a mir
ror much more congenial to her taste
than the one that confronted her in
her dressing-room. The “widow in
deed” derives a sweet and solemn con
solation from the letter of the beloved
one who lias journeyed before her to
the far oft land, from which there
conies no message and where she hope
one day to join him. No photographs
can so vividly recall to the memory of
the mother the tenderness and devo
tion of the children who have left at
the call of heaven as the epistolary
out-pourings of their love. The let
ters of a true son or daughter to a
true mother is something better than
image of the features ; it is a reflex
ol the writer’s soul. Keep all love let
ters. Burn only the harsh ones, and
in burning them [forgive and forget
them.
Girls and Boys.
“I like hoys,” says a popular writer
for the little folks. “Girls are very
fine and sweet like flowers and
oranges ; hut boys are like apples—
that is, they always remind me of
apples, because apples are such solid,
wholesome, good-natured, everyday
sort of things, that keep well and pos
sess real characters and other noble
qualities, hut I am talking of hoys
now.
As everything in this world is sure
to.have something back of it, so the
hoys have their mothers—or have had
them. Of course they teach you to
speak the truth, that it is wicked to
cheat or steal, to fight or swear. One
might he a heathen and know better
than to do those things. Then your
mother tells you ‘to behave.’ It is
this ‘behaving’ business I am after.—
A man who was once a hoy and is
now a man, and whose name is Emer
son says :
“Give a boy address and accom
plishments, and you give him the mas
tery of palaces and fortunes wherever
he goes, lie has not the trouble of
earning or owning them ; they solicit
him to enter and possess.”
Important to Those Who Draw
Notes.
A man drew a note promising to
pay one hundred dollars. He used
the printed form and did not close up
the blank devoted to dollars, and, af
ter passing it as negotiable paper,
somebody inserted “and fifty” alter
the one hundred and before the printed
word dollar. The note, thus altered,
got into the hands of an innocent par
ty, who presented it to the drawer,
and the Supreme Court decided that
the maker of the note was liable for
its face, because through negligence
lie did not draw a line between the
written word “dollars.” Any testimo
ny tnat the drawer might offer to es
tablish the fact he gave the note for
one hundred dollars must go for noth
ing, as “there was nothing on the face
of the note to show that it had been
altered.” Evidence of the alteration
on the face of the note would have
changed the case Let this be a les
son to all drawers of promissory notes.
No one can be too careful in such mat
ters. —Baltimoie News.
The Judge who made that decision
should be impeached. It simply tells
the villains, of whom there are many
all over the country, that if tljey fiud
a chance to alter a check by writing
in a word— a hundred thousand or a
thousand—they can do so, and the
court will justify them. At least, the
court will hold the forgery to be legal,
and force the party who gave the
original check, (for a less sum,) to pay
the full amount of the forgery. There
appears to be fraud enough in the
country without legal decisions to en
courage them —Hartford Times.
Pushing Doan Southwest. —A very
able exodus of colored people is in
progress from the Eistern Gulf States
across the Mississippi. The blacks
are making for Texas. The New Or
leans Picayune estimates that since
1810 100,000 negroes have gone to
that State, and 300,000 whites. It re
gards Texas as the safety-valve of the
South, and has no fears that the negro
emigration th< r i will exceed the
white. In Alabama the departure of
the blacks is consolidating a perma
nent Democratic power. In Mississip
pi and Louisiana, where the blacks
were m< re numerous than the wl iu*s
ia 1810, there is a steady decline in
there numb* rs, and the white vote will
soon be the largest.
Coffee
This prime article of consumption,
which has ruled so high in all the
Southern markets for several weeks
past, has taken a tumble in New York.
Under high prices the demand has fal
len off, many families ceasing its use
altogether, and, as a necessary conse
quence, the stock has largely increas
ed. The Daily Bulletin of Tuesday,
February 17, says that “for Rio the
market was very dull, and we reduce
quotations At these figures business
was very dull ; at the out-ports busi
ness was also dull. The stocks to
night are as follows : 47,909 hags at
New Tork, 15,340 bags at Baltimore,
2,549 hags at Hampton Roads, 3,500
hags at Galveston, 500 hags at New
Orleans, 1,000 hags at Savannah ;
total, 70,790 hags, against 44,417
hags this timer last week, and 46,701
hags January 15. Mild coffees were
quiet and merely nominal at quota
tions.” The Bulletin omits Mobile al
together from the list, which, if in
cluded, would swell the stock by sev
eral t ousand hags.
Temperance.
Washington, February 27 —The
detail* of the temperance raid covers
many pages. It is too absurd to go
further South than Washington by
telegraph. The women have dirty
water thrown on them, and eat their
lunch while kneeling in gutters. The
lady raiders are about fifteen—not of
age by any means.
New York, February 27—A Cincin
nati dispatch says that the German
paper in Dayton has come out against
the temperance crusade, and
earnestly advises the men to organ
ize into regiments, and by an appeal
to arms to drive back the temperance
women. It claims that men’s rights are
being infringed upon, and lifts its
voice in holy horror.
Tlie ‘Dead Swamp Ansel’.
A dispatch from Moss Neck, Rob
eson county, N. C., says the young
men who killed Steve Lowery, hired a
cart and took the body to Lainberton.
Immediately there was a wild commo
tion in town. The streets were soon
filled with an excited crowd discuss
ing the tragedy, and all rejoicing
that the last of the outlaws had been
killed. The body was perfectly rid
dled with halls and buckshot. The
head was perforated in several places
and there were large wounds in the
heart, any of which would have proved
fatal.
The outlaw was armed to the teeth
there being found on his person vhen
he Was killed a Henry riHo, three
pistols and a knife with a blade about
twelve inches in length. He was
only about 28 or 29 years of age. Ho
is said to have been the most coward
ly and at the same time the most
treacherous and vindictive of them
all.
Blazing With Diamonds. —Mrs. Wil
liam B. Astor of New York city, illus
trated the expression almost literally
at a party given by her one evening
last week. On each of her shoulders
she had four stars, the size of silver
half dollars, made of diamonds. Her
hair was set thickly with diamonds,
and her head seemed aflame with
them. There was a diamond bandeau
upon her brow. She had diamond
earrings and a diamond necklace of
magnificent proportions. Upon the
two sides of her chest were two
circles of diamonds about the size of
the palm of the hand. From them
depended lb es and curves of
diamonds reaching to her waist,
around which she wore a diamond
girdle. On the the skirts of her dress
m front were two large peacocks,
wrought of lines of diamonds. Tnere
were rosettes of diamonds upon her
slippers. There were diamonds large
or small, but in every variety and
form, all over her dress and person,
wherever they could be artistically
placed. Sbe presented an extraordi
nary dazzling spectacle. A connois
seur in precious stones, who was pres
ent says the diamonds she wore couiu
not have cost less than a million of
dollars.
Postal Reform. —lt is 6aid that
the Senate Appropriations Committee
will propose an amendment to the
laws so as to provide that
after the 30th of June, 1814, jonvey
ance in the mails samples of merchan
dise, packages of clothing, seeds, cut
tings, bulbs, roots, scions, samples of
metals, ores and miueralogical speci
mens, and bound books shall cease
and all laws authorizing such convey
ance shall be repealed.
The reason for such repeal is that
the mails are lumbered with among
other things, beehives, with live bees
in them fed with honey and sheltered
by glass : boots and shoes, and other
incongruous articles which are sent
through the mails under the provision
that everything except some danger
ous liquids can be sent through trie
mails if not weighing over four
pounds.
A man named Bloomfield, who was
an accomplice of the notorious Bender
family, of Kansas, was arrested re
cently, but took strychnine and died
before his trial. It has been estab
lished that Bloomfield assisted in
building the Bender house, and ar
ranged the screen in front of which
the victims were placed in order to
despatch them, and that he was an in
mate of the house for some months
during the scenes of the terrible mur
deis which so shocked the world,
and made Labette county so notori
ous.
The local poetizer of the Courier-
Journal grinds dismally on the tem
ance question. Says he :
O, woman ! in our hours of ease,
jou know we’ll do whate’er you
please ; we’ll promise to renounce the
sin of Bourbon, brandy, rum and gin,
and go so far as to refrain (except
when tempted) from champaign ; hut
have some mercy, do, my dear, and
leave, oh leave us lager-beer !
Worth, the man milliner of Paris,
is a native of Lilcolnshirc, England.
His father was a lawyer, but became
reduced, and his childrtn had to shift
for themselves. Charles Frederick
wen to Paris and learned to make
dresses. He married one of the young
women of the establishment, and to
gether they have gradually developed
the most celebrated toilet manufactory
in the world. They employ a thou
sand work people.
Quackery in Kentucky.— lt will go
hard with the quack doctors hereafter
in Kentucky, for among the last bills
passed by the Legislature was one
for their suppression. The new law
winch goes into immediate operation
declares a penalty ol tine and impris
onment against any person who shall,
for reward or compensation, practice
medicine or perform any surgical op
eration who has not graduated at
some school of medicine in this or for
eign country, who cannot produce a
certificate of qualification from one of
the boards of medical examiners pro
vided for in the act.
New York, February 17— More
earnestness was displayed yesterday
among the temperance advocates in
this city than has previously ap
peared. .I he numerous lodges and
church societies, both Protest
ant and Catholic are receiving .new
vigor. Twenty-live thousand tem
perance tracts were ordered yesterday
by tne Massachusetts Temperance
Alliance. Over one hundred liquor
dealers ol city have written let
ters expressing a willingness to
discontinue business.
1 lie most original phase of society
life in Washington is the card an
nouncement of births. One of these
tiny cards is an infinitesimal drab-col
ored affair, with a small rabbit’s head
and ears on the flap of the envelope,
and a correspondent on inside, at the
top of a bit of a sheef, making the an
nouncement. It reads : ‘Compliments
ol Mr. and Mrs. Blank and son, Janua
ry 30, 5 p. m.
Six Hundred Workmen Dis
charged.—Ever since the Virginia
troubles a large force of workmen
have been employed at the navy yard.
Now that the war cloud has passed
away, and the government have no fur
ther employment for so large a body
of men, a wholesale discharge of some
six hundred hands has taken place.
Ex-Gov. Seymour writes in a private
letter which lias found its way to the
press: when you go to Albany, visit
the museum of natural history, geol
ogy &c.,in the State Agricultural Hall;
ask the keeper to show you a piece of
coral stone, which to my kuowedgo
has been dripping oil for twenty years
in that builoing. It may throw some
light on the oil question.
A London literary paper says of
George Elliot, that on her manuscript
she toils tremendously, working on an
average six hours a day, and rarely
accomplishing in that time more than
three or foui hundred words. Her
labors are so exhausting that she de
votes the remainder of the time to
recreation and rest.
The Grangers are aiming to obtain
control of railroads to be devoted en
tirely to the transportation of freight.
Col. E. C. Cabell, of Richmond, Va.,
has me.itly stated that a hading
member (an official) of the North-
Western Grangers has written to
Richmond to know if the Chesapeake
and Ohio Railroad can bo leased to
run exclusively in the interest of the
farmers.
A Connecticut clock company has
shipped a curious clock to San Fran
cisco, to be placed in the tower qj
the greatest hotel on the continent,
where it will furnish time for five
hundred dials, which are to be oper
ated by compressed air in pipes all
over the building.
The building has five hundred rooms,
and there is to be a dial in every
room.
“We are fearfully and wonderfully
made,” said a man to his friend as they
pensively surveyed the skeleton of a
donkey.
In Mississippi, the Lieutenant Gov
ernor, Secretary State, SuperiutendenJ
of Public Education, .and the Speaker
of the House of Representatives, are
negroes.
The Bill repealing the Lien Law has
passed both houses of the Legislature.
It only needs the appropriation of the
Governor to become a law. This ac
tion on the part of the Legislature,
will be aim st unanim ms’y endorsed.
The Act goes into effect November
next.
Tnis engagement was broken off.
A young man in the wilds of Nevada
bought a dress pattern for his fiance
and a pair of red pantaloons for him
self and—he delivered the wrong bun
dle.
The'annual diminution of the sugar
and molasses products of Louisiana is
a matter that concerns the whole
country. This shrinkage in produc
tion amounts to about one thousand
hogsheads a year n sugar, and of
nearly seventy* thousands gallons of
molasses annually.
i
Ike Moon is reported to have said
that he bought a sausage this week
and hid it under his vest and he be d-d
if Judge Rice didn’t have him arrest
ed and fined five dollars for carrying
concealed weapons.
If a man iz strikingly honest with
himself he iz sure to be so towards
others.
“Fellow trabbellers,’* said a colored
preacher, “ef I had been eatin’ dried
apples for a week, an’ den took to
drinkin’ for a monf, I couldn’t feel
more swelled up dau .1 am dis rninit
wid pride and wanity at seein’ such
full ’tendance here dis ebenin’.”
The following advertisement is post
ed near a Western depot on the front
of a small restaurant : “Lunch twenty
live cents ; dinner, fifty ; a real gorge
seventy-five cents.”
The Virginia Legislature has appro
priated $6,000 to buy artificial limbs
lor ex-Confederates.
“Doctor,” said a thick-headed youth
to Agassiz, “you once said that fish is
the proper food for men to cat who
have brain work to perform. How
much ought I to eat to tone me up
properly ?” “About two whales,” was
the reply.
i he North Frisians are very unmer
ciful to people who don’t marry. One
of their legend say that alter deith,
old maids are doomed to cut stars out
of the sun when it has sunk below the
horizon, and the ghosts of the old
bachelors must b’ow them up in the
east, running like lamp-liglners all
night up and down a ladder.
An Alderman in England being
about to depart this life, called togeth
er all persons to whom he was indebt
ed, and said : “Gentlemen, I am going
t3 die, and my death will inconven
ience you, because it will be some
time before you can get your accounts
settled. Now, if you will allow me a
handsome discount, I will settle them
myself at once.” They assented, and
the old alderman turned his death into
900 pounds profit.
The Ohio Constitutional Convention
has adopted an amendment conferring
the veto power upon the Governor,
and making a three-fifths vote of the
Legislature necessary to overcome it.
In Congress and most of the States
where the veto exists, it required a
two-thirds vote to overcome its exer
cise.
It is rumored in London and Paris
that the Prince Imperial will enter
France immedeately on attaining his
majority, which is at hand, there be
ing no ground on which his admission
to the country could be denied.
An idle young man was complain
ing to a prosperous friend that, al
though he had tried his luck in all
sorts of fairs and lotteries, he had
never been able to draw anything.
‘lndeed,’ said his friend. ‘Well, sup
pose you try a hand cart. You can
draw that.
Up to the 14th of this month the
receipts of cotton at the port of New
Orleans were over one million bales.
This is 123,003 bales more than up to
the same date last year, and are the
largest receipts of cotton since the
war. It is said that the cotton presses
in New Orleans is crammed to reple
tion, and the stock on hand is valued
at $80,000,000.
• The original patent for metalic tips
for shoes was sold for SIOO, and the
company w’hich bought it became
wealthy. Now, upon its expira
tion, the inventor has obtained its
renewal and compels the conlfrany to
pay him SOO,OOO.
Professional and Business.
JOSEPHUS CAMP,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Swains boro, Emanuel Cos., Ga.
"W ill practice in the Supreme Court of
Georgia, in the U. S. District Court for Geor
gia, and in the Superior Courts of the tollow
lng counties : Emanuel, Johnson, Laurens
Montgomery, Tatnall, and Bulloch.
JOHN F. DEL ACE Y,
Attorney and Counsellor at Law,
GRAHAM, GEO.,
Will practice in the counties of Dodge. Telfair,
Appling and Wayne, and other counties of the
Brunswick Circuit. Special attention given to
the settlement of estates and collection of
claims.
Dec 17 ’73-ly
G. J. HOLTON,
Attorney and Counsellor at Law,
BAXLEY, GA.
Practices in the Counties of Appling, Pierce,
M ayne, Coffee, )\ are, Glynn, Mclntosh, of
the Brunswick Circuit, and Telfair of the
Oconee Circuit.
D. M. ROBERTS,
Attorney and Counsellor at Law,
BAXLEY, GA.
Will practice in the Brunswick, Oconee and
Middle Circuits.
Special attention to collection of claims.
L, A. HALL,
Attorney and Counsellor at Law,
EASTMAN, GA.
Mill practice in the Circuit and District
Courts of the United States, for the Southern
District el Georgia, the Superior Courts of the
Oconee Circuit, and all counties adjacent to
the M. AB.R. R. Half fee in advance ; con
sultation fee reasonable.
Office in the Court House.
i-iy.
H. W. J. HAM,
ATTO RN E Y A T I, AW ,
(Office in Court House.)
EASTMAN, GEO.,
Will practice in the U. S. District Courts,
the Supreme Court of Georgia, and the Supe
rior Courts in ihe follow ing Counties :
Laurens, Pulaski, Telfair, Dodge,
Montgomery and Appling.
Past due claims of one hundred dollars and
upwards collected at 10 per cent, commission.
Special attention to real estate business.
J. J. ROBERSON. W. W. BEACH.
ROBERSON <fc BEACH,
DEALERS IN
DRY-GOODS, "GROCERIES BAND
GENERAL MERCHANDISE,
ISAXLEY, GEORGIA.
Thankful to our numerous patrons for past
generous patronage, we would respectfully so
licit a continuance of the same.
Roberson Sc Beach.
IT I -.x :n JO 9
BAXLEY, GEORGIA.
Keeps on hand
Dry-Goods, Groceries,
WINES & LIQUORS, Etc.
My old friends can find me at my old stand,
where I am ready at any hour to supply them
with anything in my line.
Call and see me. ELIAS BRANCH.
S. SELLERS,
BAXLEY, - GEORGIA.
DEALER IN
FANCY FAMILY GROCERIES, WINES,
BRANDIES, WHISKIES, GINS, TO
BACCO, SEGARS, Etc.
Takes this method of informing his old
friends and former customers that he is pre
pared to supply them in anything in his line,
and respectfully invites them to give him a
call.
JOHN M. COOPER & CO.
Corner Whitaker it St. Julian Streets,
SAVANNAH, - - - GEORGIA,
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in
Books and Stationery of all Kinds.
We keep on hand a full stock of goods in our
line, consisting in part of Copying and Seal
Presses, Surveyors’ Compasses, News and
Book Printing Paper and Ink, Gold Pens, Pen
and Pencil Cases, Desk and Pocket Knives,
Ledger, Writing and Colored Papers, Playing,
Visiting and Printers’ Cards, Portmonaies, Ac.
School Furniture and School Requisites at
Schermerhorn A Co’s Prices, for whom we are
Agents. Books Ordered or Imported at New
York Rates,
sep 10-ly.
. DWIGHT L. BOBEBTS. F. A. GA BEEN’. !
: DWIGHT L. ROBERTS & CO., :
FACTORS
* AND
: Commission Merchants. \
* We have a good stock of Bagging and ’
* Ties on hand, and are prepared to ad- •
.' vance on produce in kind.
; seplo-l2m. *
PULASKI HODSE.
Savannah (Georgia
Fronting South, a Frontage of 273 Feet.
WM. H. WILDBERGER,
vol 1 no 1-tf Proprietor.
PRIVATE BOARDING HOUSE,
Corner President and Abercorn Sts.
SAVANNAH, GA.
Transient and Permanent Boarders Received
Charge per day, $2.00.
DR P. COX.
July 13, ’72 tf.
$50,00 0
For S^l.OO
THE FIRST GREAT SALT LAKE GIFT
Concert, authorized by and under the immL
mate supervision ol the city authorities of Co
riune C ity, tor the lienefit and in aid of the
PUBLIC FREE SCHOOL,
THE ONLY FREE SCHOOL IN UTAH TERR Y.
Trustees of Public Free School,
CAPT. S. HOWE,
J. S. GERRISH AND ALEX. TOPONCE.
$226,300
—TO BE —
distributed to the Ticket Holders
AT A
GRAND GIFT CONCERT,
TO BE HELD AT THE
OPERA HOUSE, CITY OF CORINNE
March HI, 1H74.
Depository, Bank of Corinne.
500,000 TICKETS,
Price SI.OO Each,
OR SIX FOB FIVE DOLLARS.
$226,500 IN GIFTS!
AS FOLLOWS :
1 Grand Cash Gift $50,000
J “ ' “ 25,000
} “ “ 12,000
} •“ “ 8,000
} “ “ 0,000
f “ “ 5,000
1 “ “ 4,000
J “ “ 3,000
1 “ " 2,000
0 “ “SI,OOO each 5,000
20 “ “ 500 each 10,000
100 “ “ 100 each 10,000
200 “ “ 50 each lO.OOn
700 “ “ 20 each 14,000
600 “ “ 10 each 6,000
1300 “ “ 5 each 6,500
50000 “ “ leach 50,000
52,934 Cash Gifts, amounting to $226,500
ft
ONE CHANCE IN EVERY NINE!
The distribution will be in public, and will
be made under the same form and regulations
as the San Francisco and Louisville Library
Gilt Concerts, under the supervision of a com
mittee oi prominent citizens selected by the
ticket holders.
Reference us to the integrity of this enter
prise and ol the management is made to the
lollowing well known citizens :
Sum. L. Tibbals, A. Topouce, J, Mulsh, J.
H. Gerrish Members of City Council.
Judge T. J. Black, Ass t U. S. Assessor ;
Mulsh A Gjeenwald, Proprietors Metropolitan
Hotel ; Eugene Moore, City Marshal ; W. W.
Hull, Architect ; J. iichoe, Constable ; J. Kup
ter, Jeweler; Capt. 8. Howe, Contractor O.
D. Richmond A Cos., Commission Merchants ;
M. E. Campbell, Proprietor Central Hotel ;
Singleton A ( reath, Proprietors Pacific Sta
bles ; S. I*. Hitch, .nerciiaut; Sandy, Utah ;
A. G. Garrioon, Helena, Montana.
_• - • - r
son buying a ticket can at any and all times
examine onrAbooks and all busiues transactions
connected with the enterprise; and as the
drawing of prizes will be placed in the hands
of honest and disinterested men, it will insure
a fair and impartial distribution.
GOOD RESPONSIBLE AGENTS WANTED.
LIBERAL COMMISSION ALLOWED.
Money should he sent by Express or
by Draft on any solvent bank, by Post-office
Money Order, or Registered Letter, at our
risk. For particulars, address
E. W. MORGAN, Manager.
Jan6-3m Lock Box 158, Corinne, Utah.
THE “SILVER TONGUE”
ORGANS,
The best ORGANS of the Reed class in the
World.
The Best lor Churcnes and Lodges.
The Best lor Sunday Schools.
The Best for Parlors and Vestries.
The Best lor Academies and Colleges.
The Best tor Public Halls.
The Best for Orchestra and Stage.
These instruments, which for sweetness of
tone and elegance of appointment stand unri
valled, have met with unprecedented success
in this country and abroad.
MANUFACTURED BYj
E. P. NEEDHAM AND SON.
—-1
ESTABLISHED IS 184 G.
Nos. 143, 145 & 147 East 23d St.,
NEWYOHK.
Responsible } arties applying for agencies in
iections still unsupplied, will receive prompt
-ttentiou and liberal inducements. Parties
residing at a distance from our authorized
agents, may order from our factory. Send
for illustrated price list.
NATIONAL HOTEL,
(Formerly SPOTSWOOD),
NEARLY OPPOSITE PASSENGER DEPOT
BOAED $3.00 PEB DAY.
This House has been thoroughly reno
vated trom basement to attic.
P. WHELAN, Proprietor.
THE EASTMAN TIMES
IS GOING AT
PEB Y EAH.
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